chrony 2.1.1-1ubuntu0.1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

chrony (2.1.1-1ubuntu0.1) xenial-security; urgency=medium

  * SECURITY UPDATE: Remote attackers to conduct impersonation attacks via
    an arbitrary trusted key, aka a "skeleton key".
    - debian/patches/CVE-2016-1567.patch: restrict authentication of
      server/peer to specified key.
    - CVE-2016-1567

 -- Eduardo Barretto <email address hidden>  Wed, 05 Dec 2018 18:51:33 -0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Eduardo Barretto
Uploaded to:
Xenial
Original maintainer:
Ubuntu Developers
Architectures:
linux-any
Section:
net
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Xenial updates universe admin
Xenial security universe admin

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
chrony_2.1.1.orig.tar.gz 381.9 KiB b0565148eaa38e971291281d76556c32f0138ec22e9784f8bceab9c65f7ad7d4
chrony_2.1.1-1ubuntu0.1.debian.tar.xz 24.1 KiB c384d75f9a0d9d8bce09633e2988cb581a835cb38159e0f4274cfdf5c72c2ee4
chrony_2.1.1-1ubuntu0.1.dsc 2.1 KiB e2e6ab49bb610ed6cfaf71d0674aecbed144e02f312309bc039205ca03944f9b

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

chrony: Versatile implementation of the Network Time Protocol

 It consists of a pair of programs:
 .
 chronyd: This is a daemon which runs in background on the system.
 It obtains measurements (e.g. via the network) of the system's offset
 relative to other systems and adjusts the system time accordingly. For
 isolated systems, the user can periodically enter the correct time by
 hand (using 'chronyc'). In either case 'chronyd' determines the rate
 at which the computer gains or loses time, and compensates for this.
 Chronyd implements the NTP protocol and can act as either a client or
 a server.
 .
 chronyc: This is a command-line driven control and monitoring program.
 An administrator can use this to fine-tune various parameters within
 the daemon, add or delete servers etc whilst the daemon is running.

chrony-dbgsym: debug symbols for package chrony

 It consists of a pair of programs:
 .
 chronyd: This is a daemon which runs in background on the system.
 It obtains measurements (e.g. via the network) of the system's offset
 relative to other systems and adjusts the system time accordingly. For
 isolated systems, the user can periodically enter the correct time by
 hand (using 'chronyc'). In either case 'chronyd' determines the rate
 at which the computer gains or loses time, and compensates for this.
 Chronyd implements the NTP protocol and can act as either a client or
 a server.
 .
 chronyc: This is a command-line driven control and monitoring program.
 An administrator can use this to fine-tune various parameters within
 the daemon, add or delete servers etc whilst the daemon is running.